CBCP to give formation on climate change

Clergy elated as Lobo town officials pull support from gold mining

MANILA, July 22, 2015— The local government of Lobo in Batangas has
reversed a resolution it issued earlier endorsing a mining project,
earning praise from the Catholic clergy and environmental advocates.

The resolution by Councilor Rey Nelson Amparo withdrawing support
from the MRL-Egerthon mining project was approved through a unanimous
decision by the town council during its session on Monday.

“It is really a victory for the people of Lobo,” said Fr. Dakila Ramos of Lipa’s Archdiocesan Ministry on Environment.

No consultation

The priest lamented how the town council earlier passed the
pro-mining measure “without undergoing the proper process and without
any consultation”.

The move, according to Dakila, was a “betrayal to the people of Lobo and our environment”.

“We do not want mining to destroy Lobo, and we will never agree to it
ever. It is about time that the abusive use of power stops. It is about
time that the mining companies realize that they cannot pay their way
into ravaging our lands because the people of Lobo will never let it
happen,” he said.

More than 200 people earlier rallied for the cancellation of the
mining project outside the town hall as the dialogue between the local
residents and mining firm officials was being held.

Many residents cried foul against the project for supposed lack of
sufficient consultation and its impact on the environment, especially
the Verde Island passage which the the American Smithsonian Institute
dubbed the “center of the center” of the world’s marine biodiversity.

‘Worthless’ revenue

The Verde Island Passage is home to dolphins, sea turtles, humphead
wrasses, giant groupers, giant clams, flying fish, luminous planktons,
and some 300 species of corals – considered one of the biggest
concentrations of corals in the whole world.

The MRL-Egerthon is seeking government approval to commercially mine
gold in 1,174 hectares, adding that it can give Php 640 million worth of
revenue to Lobo.

However, anti-mining group Alyansa Tigil Mina shot down the mining
firm’s claims, saying the supposed economic benefits is “worthless”
compared to the destruction the project will bring to Lobo.Jaybee Garganera, ATM national coordinator, said Lobo houses an
estimated 40,000 citizens and Mount Banoi, a watershed that provides
potable water for Batangas.“
MRL-Egerthon’s mining operation will surely produce adverse effects not just to the people but to the environment,” he said.

Coal power

“Even the people of Lobo know this that is why they are doing
everything in their power to culminate the plans of mining in their
area.”

“Social acceptability is one of the fundamental elements for a mining
operation to start and since MRL-Egerthon failed to secure this, it is
time the mining company faces defeat and leave Lobo alone.” Garganera
added.

Aside from gold mining, the Lipa archdiocese is also leading the
fight against the proposed 600-megawatt coal-fired power plant project
in Lobo.

The ATM said generating power from what is known to be one of the
dirtiest fossil fuels and biggest producers of carbon dioxide will not
only hurt the environment but also the health of the residents.

“Coal plant can also affect farmlands and all the living things in
the sea because of the toxicity it may bring in the process of heating
coal,” it said. (Roy Lagarde/CBCPNews)